The White House initially defended Trump's post, saying it was "from an internet meme video." But after backlash — including ...
Did Donald Trump really post a video on Truth Social featuring the faces of Michelle and Barack Obama superimposed on the bodies of apes? Yes, that is true: Shortly before midnight on Feb. 5, 2026 ...
President Donald Trump says he won't apologize for posting a racist video of the Obamas. Trump told reporters that, “I didn't ...
"I look at a lot of, thousands, of things," Trump said of the video. "And I looked at the beginning of it, it was fine." ...
SPAN, apologizing for his backing of Trump after the President shared a racist meme of the Obamas on social media.
The White House defended President Donald Trump over a Truth Social post with an AI-generated clip of Barack and Michelle Obama as apes.
President Trump late Friday addressed a video posted to his social media account that included a racist depiction of Barack and Michelle Obama as apes, telling reporters he didn't see the part that ...
The depiction of the Obamas, posted from Trump's Truth Social account, was included in a video pushing a conspiracy theory ...
Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina, one of the highest-ranking Black Republicans in Washington, called the video “the most ...
Rep. Mike Turner, an Ohio Republican, denounced President Donald Trump's post that depicted the Obamas as apes.
The post quickly drew fierce criticism from Democrats, some Republicans and civil rights organizations.
Karoline Leavitt dismissed the outrage, suggesting Newsweek report on something that "actually matters." ...